A European parliamentary delegation is visiting the war-ravaged Russian
region of Chechnya to assess whether the human rights situation there has
improved.

They have found a grim situation.

Kenny Gluck's kidnap caused aid workers to pull out of Chechnya

The war is still continuing, tens of
thousands of refugees are living in appalling conditions and foreign aid-workers
have pulled out of Chechnya itself.

They withdrew last week after the kidnap
of an American, Kenneth Gluck, who was working for the medical charity Medecins sans Frontieres.

Mr Gluck was seized in the lowland village of Stariye Atagi, far from the mountains where most of the conflict is going
on.

Mr Gluck's capture shows that the kidnap gangs who plagued Chechnya after
the end of the first war with Moscow in 1996 are still able to operate,
despite the presence of thousands of Russian troops.

History repeating

As in the first conflict of 1994-6, a pattern is repeating itself.

The Russians - relying on
the devastating power of their artillery and aviation - conquered most of the
territory of the republic, but then got bogged down in a partisan war with
the more mobile Chechen guerrillas in the hills.

When the latest Chechen campaign began in 1999, Russian officials promised
that what they called an "anti-terrorist operation" would be completed in a
few months.

In his New Year address two weeks ago President Vladimir Putin
again pledged that he would "bring the operation to an end".

But there is no
sign of the conflict ending soon.

Mountain warriors

According to Western aid workers and independent reports, about 30 Russian
soldiers a week are still dying in ambushes and shoot-outs with Chechen
fighters.

Russia's artillery and aviation are formidable, but the rebels beat them in the hilss

The overall Russian casualty rate since autumn 1999 has now
exceeded 3,000.

The two men Russia blamed for a series of explosions that
killed hundreds of civilians - the Chechen rebel commander Shamil Basayev
and the Saudi-born warrior known as Khattab - are still at large in the
mountains.

When spring arrives and the snows thaw in the high mountains, the rebels
will be able to move more freely south across the Caucasus mountain range.

This is the major worry of Western governments, who are afraid that the
conflict will spill over into Georgia, which is a strategic ally of the
United States and the European Union.

In recent months there have been many reports of Chechen guerrillas coming
down into the valleys of Georgia.

Two Spanish businessmen were kidnapped
there, possibly by Chechens.

The Russians have asked the Georgians for
permission to monitor the Chechen-Georgian border, but the Georgians have
refused.

That is the major reason Russia gave in December for introducing
visas for Georgians to travel to Russia.

Negotiations

With no obvious end in sight to the suffering, some Russian politicians have
again been proposing a negotiated solution with the rebels.

The liberal
Russian member of parliament Boris Nemtsov went down to the North Caucasus
in December and met representatives of the rebel Chechen president Aslan
Maskhadov.

Thousands of refugees continue to live in appaling conditions

Mr Putin said that he was not against these contacts, but
repeated his view that all armed rebels should surrender.

Another view has come from the prominent Chechen politician and former
speaker of the Russian parliament, Ruslan Khasbulatov.

Mr Khasbulatov is a
strong opponent of Chechen independence and critic of the rebels.

But in an
article in the Russian newspaper Nezavisimaya Gazeta published on 29 December, he was savagely critical of the central government's policies in
Chechnya.

Mr Khasbulatov said that Chechnya "no longer exists," after being destroyed
by wanton destruction, looting and disease.

He said the behaviour of the
Russian military had alienated the civilian population and called for new
peace talks.

Tom de Waal is the author with Carlotta Gall of "Chechnya: A short victorious war"